Finite Element Calibration of Muscle for Human Body Models
Publicerad
Typ
Projektarbete, avancerad nivå
Project Report, advanced level
Project Report, advanced level
Program
Modellbyggare
Tidskriftstitel
ISSN
Volymtitel
Utgivare
Sammanfattning
Accurate modelling of muscle tissue is critical for realistic human body simulations in
biomechanics and vehicle safety applications. This project focuses on calibrating and
validating visco-hyperelastic material models for muscle tissue, specifically comparing
the Ogden model and a General Hyper-elastic rubber model, implemented in LS-DYNA.
The study leverages uniaxial compression test data at strain rates ranging from quasistatic
(0.01/s) to dynamic (90/s) to fit material parameters. Analytical derivations and
numerical optimizations (using LS-OPT) were employed to calibrate the models, followed
by validation via Single-Element Tests and Unit Cell Tests to assess stability and accuracy.
Results demonstrate that the Ogden model effectively captures quasi-static and low
strain-rate behaviour but exhibits discrepancies in visco-elastic regimes, overestimating
stresses at higher strains and strain-rates. The General Hyper-elastic model provided
a comparable fit but required higher-order terms for accuracy. Both models achieved
numerical stability close to 70% compressive strain, benchmarked against a material implementation
known to be numerically stable. Full-scale impact simulations using the
SAFER Human Body Model revealed close alignment with experimental data for humerus
plate impacts, though deviations occurred in bar impact scenarios.
Key challenges included interpreting LS-DYNA’s visco-elastic implementation. Future
work should address viscous behaviour modelling, expand experimental datasets, and
refine geometry-specific calibrations. This study advances the fidelity of muscle tissue
representation in HBMs, supporting safer automotive design and injury prediction.
